at the time of our visit to Long’s Key in the spring of 1887. 
These are the only stations ae seudophoenix is now know 
b of the Florida Reef K ahaman in its 
ro 
fact if this was not found in some of the Sani . STOUP, 
plants of which are still very imperfectly know 
Six years after the above account was niblehed the pal m 
i Ww. 
ey. A chronological list of figures and plates is given in a 
foot-note. 
Within three years after its discovery in Florida, John I. 
Northrop and Alice R. Northrop§$ found Pseudophoenix on 
. S. Sargent, Garden and Forest 1: a 1888, 
$ Garden and Forest 1: fig. 55, fig. 56. a Silva of North oan 10: vg 
sag ead Journal of the New York Botanical Garden 5: fig. 2%. 1904, 6 
§ John Tsaiah Northrop was born in New York City, October 12, 1861. 
After graduation as engineer of mines at Columbia Cole, in 1884, | ia spent 
Deadwood, South Dakot: bi 
6 for graduate work, and receiving his Ph. D. legree in 1888, 
p. t 
zoology at Columbia, and it connection with his work in that one 
that he met wit! is the Tae Get resulted in his death, June 26, 1891, 
his thirtiet 
Alice Belle Rich was born in ne York City, March 6, 1864. She ch 
at the Normal College of that ee Cae ae in 1882, a 
tutor in botany in that arene ie rom 1885 to She married John 
Northrop, June 28, 1889, and was closely associated and all of a scientific 
work, including the B. married 
life. After his ier she continued, as health tubo He study of the 
plants collected in the Bahamas, and eleven years later Le 
New Pro ie and Andros,” as volume 12, als of a Memoirs of 
the Torrey Botanical Club.—John Hendley Barnhar 
